Insanity: A Friendly Friday | EP 305 - podcast episode cover

Insanity: A Friendly Friday | EP 305

May 10, 20241 hr 24 min
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Episode description

"Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result." This was attributed to Einstein, although there is no evidence he actually said this. @RealSteveFriend and I will discuss news breaking yesterday from FBI HQ related to Suspendable Garret O'Boyle. We'll also re-touch on the April 22, 2024 show talking about FISA 702 and a WIRED magazine article from this week proving: if you aren't listening to the Kyle Seraphin Show, you are weeks behind._______________________________________________________________Visit https://rumble.com/user/CatholicVote/videos for more content Use PROMO CODE "KYLE" at these sites: http://PatriotCoolers.com/ (Tumblers & Coolers)http://The-Suspendables.com (Show Merch)http://MyPillow.com/Kyle (Pillows/Towels/Bedding)https://matthatjerky.com/kyle (premium Beef Jerky) 🇺🇸 Follow Kyle on X/Truth Social/Instagram: @KyleSeraphin⭐️ APPLE Podcasts 5-star Reviews (Leave one and listen for us to read it): https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-kyle-seraphin-show/id1654162813

Transcript

Take a look behind the curtain with a real whistleblower, an American patriot. Prepare to embrace the uncomfortable truth, because this program has no time for comforting lies. Here is civil liberties enthusiast, Second Amendment defender, and recovering FBI agent Kyle Serif. Hello, my friends. Welcome to the Kyle Serif Show. Today is Friday. It is Monday the 10th. Oh man, we are rolling live. We should be on rumble.com/kyle Serafin.

You guys can go over there and hit the like button and you may be challenged by the website which seemed like he was having some issues this morning. Not surprising it didn't want to stream when we started getting going. So looks like it's going. I'm watching the stream thing. It says streaming. Those of you in the chat, give me some thumbs up when you guys can you start seeing us over here? We are going to be rolling live with Steve friend just in a minute here.

And we've got an interesting show I think lined up for you. We're going to be talking about insanity. Insanity is one of those things that you do over and over again. You keep expecting a different result. Maybe that is us expecting friendly Fridays to go off without a hitch. That would be silly. It never goes off without a hitch. Whenever we bring Steve on, we always get weird stuff happening. We appreciate all of you guys waiting around on YouTube over on on X and so on.

If you guys are sticking around and you're waiting a second going, what the Hell's happening? Yeah, we just had streaming failure. What's funny is, is that everybody kind of attributes this quote, those who repeat the same thing over and over again and expect a different result, that's the definition of insanity. They they always attributed to Einstein. Apparently Einstein never had that statement. That's not an Einstein quote

just made-up. It didn't appear attributed to Einstein until the 1980s, which is probably why I always think of it that way. That's when I was a kid. But it's not real. Like so many things in the world, we're always told these repeated myths and they're not real. They actually are kind of insane, if you believe them. We're going to cover down on a number of those. Today we're going to talk about the FBI doing wiretaps, specifically seven O2 FISA, which I covered on our show April 22nd.

There is a new article that came out on Wednesday, didn't cover yesterday because of our interview, but discussion by Wired magazine of Seven O2 FISA. So we're going to talk about that. We're going to talk about the missing and murdered indigenous women. You guys have probably seen movies like Wind River and realize that the white people are very, very bad. They're out there killing Indians. I got a expert on this field. We're going to bring on.

Steve Friend is going to talk to us about it a little bit. We're going to go through what is and what is not happening on Indian reservations as being sold by our federal government and also by the Indian tribes, which is kind of interesting. We're going to talk a little bit about whistleblowers.

In fact, a lot about it, because we've got the inside baseball from a story that was just dropped by Washington Times and Carey Pickett regarding are very good friend Garrett O Boyle, who, congratulations, has made it. He's made it 40 days without eating. That's kind of a little interesting secret, right? The dude hasn't eaten since Easter. Cool. Kind of a cool spiritual reset. We're going to get into that. All right.

So before we get started, let's say thanks to the friends over at Catholic Sorry at Patriot coolers. Yeah, I'm, I'm, I'm already ahead of myself. Patriot coolers.com promo code. Kyle, Kyle, get yourself a Tumblr. Do you need to put stickers on it? No. You can actually get it engraved or you can get it silk printed or screen printed or whatever they call it. You can get the suspendables items on there by going to patriotcoolers.com, pick out your favorite Tumblr, whatever

you want to to get rocking with. And then you'll go to customize just below the add to cart. You'll go to stock images. Yeah, there's a couple of clicks on here and you will be able to click the suspendables and you'll be able to do exactly what you see on the screen. Here I've got the OD green, that's a 32 ounce Tumblr. You can get that either laser etched or you can get it printed. Some of them do not have laser etching because they have a

handle that gets in the way. Anyhow, interesting choices, beautiful looking products. And unlike Stanley, you're not going to get lead poisoning from getting it. It does have a a rifle on it, but you're not going to get lead poisoning. Check out Patriot coolers.com again. Patriot coolers.com promo code. Kyle, Kyle. And we'll break away and do some more sponsors in a bit. Let's bring out my buddy. He's going to unmute himself. Here it is, the real Steve friend. Hey, how you doing, Steve?

Good morning. I had my entire world world shattered. I found out that Einstein didn't say the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again. I mean, goes to show you that you know, Abraham Lincoln said. Don't trust everything you read on the Internet. That's such a good meme. Thank you. Thank you for that. Abraham Lincoln? Yeah. Famously attributed for Internet Internet skepticism and Einstein falsely attributed to defining, defining insanity.

What's funny is the first thing that came up was a a burned out physician web page. I think it was called the burned out physician or something like that. And they're like Why on earth does Einstein even think he's an expert on mental health? Of course they take umbrage like, hey man, stay in your, stay in your. Language Einstein. Why don't you just stick with the the Rosenbridge and figure out what's going on with the space-time continuum once you stay out of our mental health

problems here, bro? Look, we we're all about the feels here. You're all about the facts. Let's be really disciplined and make sure that we are concentrating it down on what we really know, OK? Well, we're going to talk about something that you really know. Are you prepared for this? Take a deep come. All right here. We go.

I'm armed and ready to go. Ladies and gentlemen, the federal government has told you this is through the Department of the Interior. Our first Indian born Department of Interior Secretary has been pushing this problem that supposedly exists. And I say supposedly because Steve's going to probably debunk that supposedly exists on our Indian reservations. This is the missing and murdered indigenous women MMIW. You know it's serious because

they have their own acronym. Let me read directly from a website which is NIWRC dot org. This is a National Indigenous Women's Resource Center. So this is for Indian ladies and this is what they say. You're seeing this on the screen. Current Federal Indian law, yes the word Indian is actually built into the laws. Is often refers to it as a maze of injustice.

Ongoing federal intrusions into the sovereign authority of Indian nations to protect their people and create safe communities has resulted in perpetrators facing little if any consequences for their crime. OK, the high rates of violence and murder of Native women and the lack of accountability for such crimes are clearly tied to

this federal intrusion. It's the government's fault guys, the erosion of tribal authority and the federal government's failure to fulfil its trust responsibility to safeguard the lives of Native women. This crisis continues with the limited prosecution to perpetrators and the high rate of federal case declination by US Attorneys in crimes of domestic violence, sexual assault, sex trafficking and murder in Indian country.

OK, so the things that we're going to talk about here, Steve, very specifically, is going to be the declination rates and maybe who are the people responsible for all these dangerous, violent crimes killing off murdered and missing indigenous women? Can you tell me your experience with this MMIW situation? I can, I can to address the violent crime, like everything else in the country, is very

intra racial. So the perpetrators of violence against Native American women tend to be other Native Americans. They might be women. They might be men. And for purposes of this show, yes, there are two genders. So it's Indians who are killing Indians. Just like white people tend to kill white people, black people tend to kill black people.

I do think it's interesting though that we're going to focus down on the women who were murdered, whereas every homicide that I worked was a man who was killed. But I guess they're not too important. But as far as the missing component to this, you've referenced Wind River and Side Note that's an actual resident agency of the FBI. There's four people that work there. It's not an abandoned area.

They didn't just send the new agent from Las Vegas to fly in there to address it. Getting a shootout in a trailer after being pepper sprayed and walk away. I mean, and unless apparently that only works on Wind River and in the United States Capitol, you can just shoot a guy and walk away. Hold hold on a second on this though, because because that movie got a lot of attention.

And and the storyline, if you're not familiar with Wind River, which I will reveal to you right now, is essentially that some oil workers were. One of them was a good guy and he was, he had a girlfriend who was a beautiful native woman. And the the other guys decided that they were going to kill that guy and rape his girlfriend. And then she runs off and dies. And then they investigated.

And the investigator, as you stated, is a noob female with no experience who steps off from Las Vegas, doesn't even have a parka. But in reality, just like many of the major Indian reservations in this country, there is an actual agent assigned, multiple agents assigned. Sometimes entire office is assigned. That's all they do. All they do is Indian crimes and they handle specific reservations. My buddy was out in Shelby, Mt doing that.

I was the guy that was assigned to the Mescalera Apache when I was being removed. Like, there are agents who go through specialized training and all they do is handle Indian Reservation crimes. And Wind River is actually one of them that has a specific office. It's like one of the bigger ones. Correct. And and the actual jurisdiction that they do spell out in that movie is accurate.

That's why the FBI has to come in and sort of like fill this gap, this void that exists, because there's always weird jurisdictional issues. So if a crime happens on the reservation, the tribe can charge it, but they can only charge it really as a sort of a misdemeanor. Even if it's like a murder or rape, if the person who commits the crime is a Native American, they can charge them. If they're not a Native American, then they can't.

So theoretically, like in that movie The the oil workers were white guys, right? If they could commit a rape or a a murder and the tribal police by law can't charge them with a crime. And if it happens on the reservation, even though the reservations in a county, the county prosecutors a lot of times say hey it's on the rez not going to mess with it. So therefore you could have these guys going out there and actually committing crimes.

So the feds come in, fill that gap, stand in the gap there and can bring down the the hammer on those, on people. So there's a legitimate reason to have it. But to what we're talking about here with the missing women, this is completely contrived because they do what they do with everything. Statistically in the federal government, particularly in the FBII can tell you that I would be probed and prodded to go and check in on these missing women.

I would go out to the reservation and and liaise with the travel police, which, you know, they're my buddies. I talk to them every day. And I would say, hey, you know, what's up with these two women? I have them as missing. And they would say, Oh no, they they live in town, live in Sioux City. They, they moved off the reservation. They're working. You want to see their Facebook page?

Yeah, here they are. So I've located the women, but I was told they're still missing because they don't live on the reservation anymore. So we're going to just keep them on the list. Yeah. So I did a a kind of a classic drive out to do a knock and talk looking for some lady who was missing and bang on the door of this whatever trailer type thing that's in the middle of this big property. And there's like maybe 30 kids listening to like EDM, you know, and they answer the door like

complete retards. Like there's no other way to explain what these people are like. People sticking their head out the window. Hey, I think the cops are here. Hey, are they the cops? Hey, man, are you the cops? I'm like, no, I'm one guy. I'm not the cops. I am just one FBI agent. But I'm looking for this lady. Yeah, because she doesn't live here. I would always start.

That was my favorite. By the way, the best Indian thing that I saw when I was out in Montana was starting with the word, because I don't know any other place where that happens. I think sometimes your children might do that when they're still, like, learning how to speak, but you'd knock on the door and you'd be like, hey, I'm looking for this lady because she doesn't live here anymore. And you're like. It's a great effect. Yeah, it's so weird. Saying, guess what? Guess what?

Yeah, my daughter loves the Guess what, the Guess What game it's like, just tell us whatever you're going to say, sweetheart, we don't have this kind of time. We have a toddler that's vomiting on us or an infant. But yeah, so they would go because she doesn't live in here anymore. She's in Seattle, you know, everything's semi questionable

almost Stoner talk. But it's unique to the kind of areas you go to. And so this guy gives this thing, it's almost Cheech and Chong like and and then they're like we try to, we could reach her on the Facebook, you know, it's like, could you. OK, cool. Would you tell her that I'm looking for her, 'cause? I just want to validate. And they showed me the Facebook page, as you just said, this is, this is universal, it seems across all of at least the Western res that I've ever heard

of there. Are these women sort of missing? Sometimes they would be missing and they would be murdered, but they were like known meth addicts that went off in the middle of a Blizzard by themselves. And then they climbed into a river and swept downstream and no one ever found the body. So there'd be that and you're like, I guess they're missing. But they, they were known for what we would call in the medical world. We call it misadventures, death by misadventure.

That's like sort of like when you off yourself by doing meth and walking into a Blizzard or drinking yourself into and, you know, jumping off a boat. And there's another aspect to to where the it's the almost like the the game of telephone this these rumors would come out. So if a if a woman died very clearly of natural causes be like her liver was the size of a spare tire because she drank herself to death by age 38.

Speaking from experience, I've seen it and he falls down drunk and passed out and dies in the elements because it's freezing to death because I've seen it. Then they say, well if you don't do a full investigation of this, then she was murdered. And then they, the rumors start to circulate. They start doing the candlelight vigils year after year. They contact the media and the media wants to perpetuate the same narrative of the evil white man. The evil FBI is not doing their job out there.

So they start saying, oh, it's very mysterious. This woman died that she and she was definitely murdered and they didn't investigate. So we would go bend over backwards, we do autopsies and and go to the mom and say look, she died of natural causes. That's what happened here, spending taxpayer dollars by the thousands and thousands. And then the mom would say, I reject that premise. This is a cover up. This is a cover up and it would

be all for naughty. You want to cover why so many United States Attorney's offices, the AUSA that are assigned to reservations, do declanations for prosecution in a lot of these cases. Well, they have a limited bandwidth. They essentially become like the county prosecutors that you see in all across the country, like they just have an overwhelming volume of cases if they take everything from the federal level. Because the violations on an Indian Reservation are just

violent crime. And it can just be like an assault happened. Two guys get drunk. One guy hits the other guy with a bottle. That's serious bodily injury. That's an assault. They can be charged federally for it. And it gets to the point if they take everything, then they get bogged down. They can't possibly handle it on. There's only a few of them.

The I only dealt with maybe four or five of prosecutors, and they had other cases outside of just the reservation, but they were sort of specializing in that area. And I've gone in and said, like, hey, I have a stabbing. I had this guy, he stabbed the other one in the eyeball with a grilling fork and they were fighting over who got to sleep in the van that night and he confessed to it. And they said, yeah, we're gonna have to decline on this one.

I'm just how stabbed was he? I was like the eyeball like that. Just he's got two of them right now. I'm just climb. How stabbed was he is a question that I've also heard. It was my first exposure to to Indian Country. So I I flew out to Montana, I landed in Great Falls and I'm driving to go. I'm doing a temporary duty out there for my first 30 days on the Blackfoot Reservation, which is where I had some very interesting adventures and saw

some of the weirdest things. They also have amazing names. They have the best real what you expect Indian name in the country and I am very, very thankful that the Blackfoot reservation exists like, like names like heavy Runner and many Guns and has no horses are like last names you know. And they're they're they're brilliant, they're amazing. But we get out there and my buddy's picking me up from the airport and he's on duty. So he picks me up.

We drive up, we're heading up. It's an hour and a half up to get to the to the to the office, which is still an hour and a half away from the rez. Pretty classic story. Everybody's kind of like all over the place in in this big rural area. And as we're driving up the highway, he gets a call. It's a police Sergeant from the tribal PD. You know, got this guy, he's been stabbed. First question, how stabbed is

he? And the answer is a pocket knife, you know, multiple penetrations, you know, no serious loss of blood stitches, no hospitalization required. It's like probably going to decline.

I'll run it by the prosecutors. They just they don't have the bandwidth for it. And then the second thing is and I think this is something we should also highlight the number of these incidences where the victim is so inebriated, they are unreliable and or there is absolutely no way to determine like both of the the victim and and the perpetrator are both intoxicated to the point of what would kill you and. Me. Most likely.

It was standard questioning for every interview that I ever did, every interrogation that I ever did, question about the alcohol abuse because it's so rampant. I mean, it's like a source of hydration and the way you have to sort of. I at least had the soft pedal it. I wouldn't be like, hey man, how many drinks did you have? I'd be, you know on a scale of one to 10, how drunk were you?

Oh I was like A6 or A7, OK how many drinks does it normally take you to get to A6 or A7 on that scale And they'd be they'd be like, oh 1415 beers. I mean I I rolled up to the Police Department one day and saw you know they they he wasn't even handcuffed. I mean they were just walking him in because he was DUI and they walked him into the jail and they the cop was laugh and he comes up to me and he goes .48 guy was walking in to the jail under his own power.

So you you can't make this kind of stuff up. And and as a medic like you know that this is such a high level of alcoholism that when that when people are functional at that level. I actually dealt with a lady who was coming down. She'd been in a, she'd been a facility, a detox facility for somewhere between 12 and 18 hours and we were going to transport her for some additional follow up and it was necessary, right. So we we transport her and her. Her blood alcohol level was like

.31. I want to say after 18 hours of detox, she was more. Drunk than my guy. And and you're like, you're like, oh, how much did you drink? And she was like, I drank a handle of vodka and I'm like, how often do you do that? And she was like, that's my daily. They're going through a bottle of cheap vodka for somewhere between 5:00 and $10. And this is going back a number

of years now. But, like, that kind of alcoholism is something most people can't fathom, to the point where when I was driving onto the rez, which was in a town called Browning, Montana, it's not really a town. It's actually a postal designation. And then the postal designation became a town when they had a flood in the 1960s and FEMA set up like a bunch of trailers. And then people just didn't leave them. And so they're still living there now in 2024.

So that's Browning, Montana. There's guys on the way out of town and they're probably like 10 to 15 minutes out of town on the walk. There is a one hour plus, probably probably closer to like an hour and 20 minute drive behind us at 80 miles an hour, 85 miles an hour like Montana highway speeds. These dudes are walking. It is freezing temperatures with a windshield that is below 0. They're in jeans, they're in a hoodie.

They have nothing but each one big brown paper bag, which we can assume is some sort of alcohol. And they are walking to go to a party. That happens and there is nothing until you get to this town, which is upwards of 80 miles in the other direction. It's like close to 100 miles. And they'll get there, like whenever they get there. That's a level, level of dedication. That's a hard type of human

being. So when you're out there trying to police it, you know, and the federal crimes are, you know, how stabbed were he? Oh, well, he lost an eye over it. We're talking about people that live at a level that most people can't even fathom in this country. Would that be accurate? Yes. And it's a complete misconception. I mean like when my dad came to visit and I was, he was like, hey, let's go see the reservation. I was like, OK, we drive out there and he's like we're the teepees.

It's it's essentially government housing by either a FEMA trailer or there could be actual hard structure and there's no oversight of the money that the correct the rampant corruption that happens with the federal funds, even with the tribal funds, the funds that come from the casinos. It's a culture of addiction, be it alcohol, it could be pornography, could be sex addiction, could be methamphetamines or any other hard drugs or gambling.

And then you get out there and look, there was a day, it was Mother's Day, they called it Mother's Day was once a month. Mother's Day was when the checks rolled in and the teachers at the schools knew that they would have almost no attendance the day after Mother's Day because the parents were so blasted that they did not get their kids to school that day. It's. It's just something most.

People, it's a crab trap. And the fact that if in my case the two women that actually escaped it and from what I saw on their Facebook at least you know, had jobs, lived in a small you know, 80,000 person city that I lived in myself had houses. Had escaped this this object poverty and pathetic existence, and they were on the list as victims that needed to be cataloged so that the government could continue this boondoggle and keep throwing funds at it

and keep calling you and me bad. Because they they decided to do something with their lives. But we didn't. We didn't keep them on that trap. Like, it's just so counterintuitive. Why do they? Why do they lie about the numbers you think? Funding. It's always about funding. I mean, they can keep this program going and they can say look, look at this list. It's continued, it's, it's continued to grow and expand.

We need to start a new initiative because the way you promote in a structure like the FBI or the federal government is you invent a solution and then you look for a problem to apply it to. And so there's a lot of fertile territory there that you can come up with any sort of of welfare system or or law enforcement apparatus that you could put a nice little acronym on like they did there. And then you're a Blue Flamer man.

You're getting promoted to the next job, and you never have to see it implemented because you're already gone. Would you say that Indian country crimes are a high priority for the FBI? They are the lowest priority in the FBI which is actually kind of funny because they make all their numbers off of Indian country for a lot of these

divisions. So in my office in Omaha division, there's a roughly 75 special agents in the state of Iowa and Nebraska and it was me and one of the guy we're pretty productive on the Indian reservations. That's all we did and we came in for the end of the year and they were, we're gold on all of our stats, all of our quotas. We hit them all and they they pulled up the arrest total for the division and we were responsible for 30% of it.

Two guys. Yes. So this is what I wanted to get at because it's the lowest priority. It's a thing that they're making into. They're making a mountain out of this molehill and sometimes completely fabricated information. They're banking on it for stats, but they don't really fund it or they don't staff it for the manpower. And it is one of the actual authorities that the federal government can legally and justifiably get involved in. Would that be all accurate

statements? All accurate and it It attracts the person who doesn't just get assigned to it. If you raise your hand to go to it, it's the person that wants to do the job of an investigator independently, actually make an impact. You want to talk about these vulnerable people or these communities that are dire, need dire straits and in need of assistance. You have the opportunity to put some really evil people away for

a very long time. And that's what I signed up to do. I was talking to my son about it the other day because he was like, well, when you were a detective and you know, what was the worst stuff you saw? Like, he's 10. I don't want to get too graphic

with him. But I explained to him how I had a woman who facilitated because she worked for the Child Family Services. She facilitated a retarded boy to be put in her care so she could get bonus money because he was retarded versus a normal foster kid. And then she locked him in a closet in her basement. OK? She actually latched him. And he slept on a concrete floor and defecated all over himself and his only friends, as he told us, were the rats that crawled

over his legs. I got to put her in prison. Like, that was super rewarding to me. But most people in the FBI, like, hey, that's kind of sounds gross. Don't want to think about it, Steve. As long as you handle it, you can cut every corner that you want. Hey, and by the way, your goals and all your numbers, because you're you're getting the right number of arrests. We're good here. Yep, the the worst things that I saw as an agent were also on a Res.

I didn't have to do it for nearly very long. But like, even my last day of real of real duty before I was unceremoniously removed for not putting COVID swabs up my nose. The last day was being called. Yeah, being called out at 0300 and said, hey, you're working on the Res. You understand how violent crime works. Can you go and help an investigation with our brand new agent who just came out of Quantico and we have a dead body at a federal prison? It was the, you know, the the

section of the federal prison. And interestingly, I was removed for COVID stuff. And you can't make it up, Steve. The the place I went was the COVID isolation ward, where I spent 12 hours doing interviews with every guard and every inmate who was in the area, who was being isolated. And we had a dude, you know, who was this monstrous illegal alien had come in. Monstrous. He was like 300 lbs, huge, huge head, like the size of two bowling balls, just a monster head.

And he had a motorcycle helmet. He had a bullet wound in the back of his head that apparently had healed a long time ago. He actually had a slug in the back of his head that had just been there and they were like and he was talking and he somehow we don't they they ruled that his death was unrelated to the the other inmate that was in with him who was tiny. It's a tiny little guy. Apparently the guy got up, lost his mind and then fell over dead.

Probably a COVID thing. You never know at that point in time, it was definitely a possibility anyway that we were, you know, sent off to the medical examiner's office. That was my last thing. I can tell you that the number of FBI agents, of the 14,000 agents that have seen a dead body because of work, what do you think it is? Triple digits top. So there's about 150 agents to work in Indian reservations. So about 150.

Yeah, that's it. Like nobody else is doing that nobody else is going out on. A dead Even if it's a violent crime, you know. Oh, we work safe streets. There was a gang shootout. No, the locals handled it. And then you swept in the next day and grabbed the report. There's a fair number of guys that work on these violent crime task force or whatever that are actually rolling with local PD and actually doing, you know, Connecticut's.

But it's not dead body hits unless they accidentally shoot somebody and they have to kill somebody. We're going to talk about a shooting a little bit later on. I want to break over to say thanks to my buddies at Catholic Vote who are supporting us guys. The new Between the Lines, which is our podcast with Catholic Vote has dropped. You can find the link in the description. If you're watching on Rumble, you'll see the link for Rumble.

If you're watching on YouTube, you'll see the link for YouTube. If you're watching on X, follow them on the The X Platform, which is at Catholic Vote. Same story for those of you watching on Facebook. If you guys catch it between the lines, it's our new little thing. It's a little decision for those of us who are not the most thrilled about our options when it comes to the presidential election. I'm not trying to elect someone to be a role model for my children and kind of a

discussion about that. You guys can follow Catholic Vote at catholicvote.org. You can get the loop, which is where you're going to get great news. If you don't get enough news out of today's podcast, you can always go there and get a quick primer on what's happening in the world. And I think you guys will be, you'll be well informed. You will not be the person who doesn't know what's happening at your water cooler in your office. This I got a video that I want

to play with you. This is the epic rant. I rarely do this kind of stuff folks, but this is a long form, 3 minute or so rant that I think encompasses a lot of the frustration we have. We are going to talk about some really dangerous programs. We talked about the Indian country specifically because it's contrast to the high priority. The high priority is national security. Would you agree with that? No, no question. That is the Prime Directive.

OK, we've got a story that came out of Wired magazine, which if you watch our podcast, you would have already known about going back to April 22. We're going to have a little bit more insight on it. The problem is, it's in stark contrast to what we're hearing Donald Trump say on his own platform on True social. This doesn't mean that Donald Trump is not the better option between Biden RFK, both of whom are apparently like pro baby murder up to the point of birth.

But we've got to push on the man that we want to represent us if he's going to be not my my kids, you know, role model. I still want him to not fund this horrible agency that got rid of you and me. Our buddy Garrett O'boyle has done some awful things in this country and is 100% committed to violating civil liberties. This is Jesse Kelly, who's a friend of ours. He's had us on his show. I appreciate the way he speaks. I've never seen him this pissed.

I think this encapsulates a lot of the suspendables feelings right now. You think? Oh, absolutely. I mean, I I did. You send me this originally. I think you originally sent me this video. Yes, I did. I did. I was alerted to it by his producer. He was like, hey, just so you know Jesse was really fired up. You should watch this. And I watched the clip and then I watched the whole thing, the expanded one. He man, he went straight for 10 minutes. In the same vein was it was

really, really angry. And then his radio show. He did it for a full hour. Yeah, because this is a real problem, folks. This is a real problem when the guy who is who's asking for your vote doesn't seem to get it and we're all trying to push on it. I can't tell you the number of Trump investigators that are like, you know, there's there's people in his camp that reach out and talk to us. We're we're friendly with people that are in that that orbit.

How are they not getting this through that This agency is antithetical to American liberty. Jesse Kelly obviously gets it right on the head. Like I said, three minute long form. Here you go. Let's address something that Trump put up today. This is the second time he's said something like this when it comes to the FBI. Trump went on social media and he said this. I'll just read him. This is verbatim, direct quote.

The new FBI building should be built in Washington DC, not Maryland, and be the centerpiece of my plan to totally renovate and rebuild our capital city into the most beautiful and safest city anywhere in the world. The FBI must be in walking distance to the DOJ building in that the DOJ and FBI have to work closely together.

A2 minute walk to a meeting is far better than a traffic laden 2 hour drive to Greenbelt, MD. Likewise, having the FBI in DC is important for ending the violent crime, which I will do quickly. This is unacceptable. I don't give a crap how offended you are right now. I don't give a crap if this upsets you. This is ridiculous, It's unacceptable and it's naive to the point of being childlike. This is not draining the swamp. This is ensuring more mud, more muck, more filth comes into the

swamp. And I don't know what kind of crap is going on over there and the Trump campaign, but you can count me out. If this is what I get, if I get more abortion, more vaccine salesman, new FBI building, then tell me why I should give a crap. Who wins this November? What do I get? Do I get savings? Money, savings, spending, savings? Not a dime. He spent more than Obama. What do I get?

Nothing is what I get. I'm so sick of this crap and I'm sick of people who won't wake up and start pushing back against him on this stuff from his own team. His own team. Better get Trump in line, and Trump himself better get himself in line.

I cannot take this naivete of him trying to be liked by the mortal enemies that are destroying the United States of America. We will not have a United States of America 50 years from now unless the FBI is complete, completely abolished, or in the very least brought to heel. We can't have. We cannot afford four years of

Trump sucking up to him. How about a new building, guys, sucking up to the media, trying to be liked by everybody who hates you and hates me and hates the country and I won't abide by it. And if you want that, if you want Trump pom poms every single night, you have tuned into the wrong freaking show, change the channel. I am. OK, that's good. Listen, he's spot on folks. The reason that you push on this is because Trump, he's a populist.

We've talked about this a lot. Trump is a populist and he is inspired by popular opinions of people in the the MAGA movement. If you tell him this is garbage, he will move on it. He has to understand this is flippin dangerous. You don't get to move like you don't make the argument. He doesn't even seem to understand what the FBI is. Can you can you give people You just mentioned Indian crimes are the only place where violent crime is addressed by the FBI.

Would that be pretty close to accurate? You're pretty close, I mean, and you think you can make a case about like Hobzak stuff, which is basically like dopers killing dopers and gangs and and that sort of thing that they don't even. Want to do that though? They don't even want to do that work. Like like bank robberies. Used to be what the the FB is bread and butter was, and now they think it's beneath them.

The the locals a lot of times just won't even bother with the FBI because they can't get there. They're not responsive. You read these press releases about the FBI claiming that they stopped some serial bank robber and the guy was caught within a few hours because the local municipal Police Department or the Sheriff's Office, like, tracked him down with AK-9 unit and got him into custody.

And then the FBI was like, well, now that the danger's all over, we can swoop in and take it. It the reason that we do this show one of the major reasons is dispel myths and try to give people factual information. Putting the FBI in the in Washington DC, which by the way it's there right now. There's a Washington field office I used to report to it. It's in judicial Square. There are homeless people

surrounding the building. The the one corner of the FBI's building has homeless people sleeping on it permanently. They're always there. There's 40 black males that get up and wander around the streets depending on the time of day, wearing no shirts, washing their clothes and bird baths and on the ground. They are disgusting people that have just like they have no, they have no quality of life in

our nation's capital. And the idea that leaving the Hoover Building, which by the way has been there since what, like whenever they built it 1970s. The FBI has been based in DC since its inception. It doesn't have any role in making DC not a crime ribbon, you know, garbage pile. So the idea that you're, oh, we need to keep it in DC, we can't put it in Maryland, Maryland, DC, Northern Virginia. All bullshit like get rid of it.

It needs to. If you're going to have an FBI headquarters, it should be in Huntsville, AL. It's a sunk cost at this point. It's like $2.5 billion facility that was built there and I don't know the timing of when you came in, I can't remember. It's all kind of, you know, the timeline gets screwed up. But it was represented to us. We heard about Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, AL. That's going to be the new headquarters. They're putting some assets down there now.

There's be some training stuff, but the the long term plan is we're going to relocate headquarters. I remember thinking that'll actually be the rare quasi good idea from a headquarters standpoint because it'll really separate the weight from the shaft. Like, do you want to be in a position of leadership in the FBI and call the shots, or do you want to live in Washington, DC? Do you want to just have that lifestyle? And it sounded too yucky to so many of these people to move to Alabama.

And I mean, I guess it's probably a win for Alabama not to have them move in. But Huntsville is a nice area. It's basically like Nashville was 15 years ago. It's on the up and you got NASA there. Now you're going to have an FBI headquarters there. It was not going to be hard living, no.

There's a big Army base there. Still can't, can't, Oh no, we can't live the the DMV as you call it, the the DC, Maryland, Virginia area because that's they want to be near the power and and to this this myth of the violent crime. The FBI doesn't investigate violent crime. If they do, if that, if that was really what they were doing.

They're doing a really crummy job in over 1/2 of a century in Washington, DC, which is one of the most violent cities in the country, which is why they had to change the name of their basketball team from the Bullets, because that was going to fix it, I guess. But. Let me let me educate people here just a little bit about the DMV as we talked about the the DC, Maryland, Virginia area and why it is a a danger and why having an FBI office there.

Which I'm by the way at the end of that that rant which I actually did cut off. It wasn't 3 minutes. I just I I realized that he says the same thing for a little while just pissed at the end of it. He says you don't have to like it, but I'm right. Let me explain to people why I'm right. Because I am. DC is home to what they call the Golden Triangle in the FBI. The Golden Triangle is the Baltimore field office, the Washington field office and the Hoover Building. FBI headquarters, right.

Anybody that has aspirations of being one of the top leaders in the FBI, including the worst people that exist in federal

service. In my opinion, those people have every shot of buying a townhouse, a row house, a brownstone, call it whatever you want in either in in Washington DC, in the surrounding areas like Rockville County, which is very nice even though it's communist because it's in Maryland, or they do it in Alexandria, which is in Virginia. If they own guns or something, they can own any of these properties. They buy it when they get stationed at Washington Field

for the first time. Then they have the ability to never leave that little bubble, that golden triangle. They can go to headquarters. They can become a program manager. That's a that's a Supervisory Special Agent AGS 14. Entry level into management is Program Manager, where you can have oversight of something you've never actually worked. Right. So you'll have somebody that basically was like, oh, I handled like some sort of extraterritorial

counterterrorism issues. And now I'm in charge of Steve Friend, who's working on an Indian Reservation. And I don't know anything about it, but I know that I got to get my metrics and as long as Steve is getting 30% of the divisions, the rest I'm good to go. That person will then get promoted to become a real supervisor of a real squad that they really don't know anything about, like my first boss at the Washington field office, where they have dozens and dozens and

dozens of squads. I would say that your field office that you worked at probably had, what, maybe 15 squads total. Oh, not even? No. No, nowhere close to it. We only had 75 agents. OK, 75 agents divided by, let's say 6, you know, so maybe there were 10 squads. That's probably about right. You probably had 10 squads at your field office. Washington field has more than 10 squads just working counterterrorism, more than 10 squads working counterintelligence.

They have a cyber division. They've got all the divisions. So you've got dozens of positions for GS fourteens to get what they call desk experience, which is a field supervisor. Then they get a chance to go back and they want to become a 15. So they're going to go to headquarters and they're going to be called a a unit chief or a section chief.

And I'm it's I'm nebulous on what those jobs look like as far as like pay grade, but that gives them an opportunity to come back to the field and be an ASAC. Usually there's one assistant special agent in charge in a field, maybe there's two in Washington field, There's like 15, there's 15 frontline supervisory. It's like second tier supervisors that are working out

of Washington field. You got another couple of them up in Baltimore. You've got 5 special agents in charge of the field office working out of Washington Field. You've got one assistant director that's an SES two position. So they've got all of these things. They never have to leave. They move into DC six years into their experience in their in their total FBI experience. My supervisor, by the way, bought her brownstone. She had been in the FBI for 3

1/2 years. She knew where her career she actually. Spent nine years at headquarters. And and even just stick a pin in the Washington field office which is the the operations for Washington DC they're supposed to be doing the the criminal investigations. The Counterterrorism National Security for Washington DC It's already there of responsibility, just the headquarters. One in five FBI employees works

at FBI headquarters. So combine that with Washington field office and Baltimore and Richmond, which we left off, and maybe even to to Philadelphia. I mean not not to mention. 40% of of the entire workforce. We're we're talking a huge percentage. We've got you had like I want to say there was like almost 1000 agents working out of Washington Field. I mean there there were thousands and thousands of employees working there and the FBI has only got 36,000 total employees.

So to say these kind of things drives us absolutely mad because people have no concept what this organization is, what they're about. And that is exactly why this Wired magazine piece should make sense to people, why it should bother people, and why people like Donald Trump need to listen to folks that know what we're talking about. We're saying it because it's important, not because, like, we just want to bag on people. I love for him to get this correct. Nothing would make me happier.

It would make all those things that our families have sacrificed actually mean something. Let me read this to you guys, OK? This just came out again. This is Wired magazine from Wednesday. Top FBI official urges agents to use wireless. I'm sorry, Warrantless wiretaps on US soil. An internal e-mail from FBI Director, Deputy Director Rather Paula Bate, obtained by Wired.

Yeah, from me. But they don't quote me or credit me and tells employees to search US persons in a controversial spy program database that investigators have repeatedly misused. This would be referred to as the top priority of the FBI, counterintelligence, counterterrorism, using these types of tools. There's some really wild stuff in here, and this is what he says, Abate says to continue to demonstrate. Ready. This is exactly what you were just talking about a second ago, Steve.

You were talking about how the FBI, they come up with a with a tool and then they decide that they have to use it to continue to demonstrate why tools like this are essential to our mission. We need to use them, his emphasis added, while also holding ourselves accountable. To doing so properly and in compliance with legal requirements, we need this tool so that we can use it. It's like pass the bill so we can find out what's in it.

The Pelosi regime, they they didn't actually need seven O 2. It didn't exist in the way that they have it before Donald Trump came into office. Obama put this poison pill into action so that the intelligence community would be armed and our GOP just funded it. There's so many elements here.

I mean like you talk about like Executive Order 12, Triple 3, which George Hill knows way more about than me, but basically gives federal law enforcement, IE the FBI, unfettered access to signals intelligence that is glommed up by the Roomba, that is the NSA. They don't need a warrant for it or any any sort of restrictions. They can just go in and shop around for whatever they want. And then you have, yes, we've reauthorized Section 702, which is supposed to be a

counterintelligence tool. You're supposed to be monitoring the electronic communications for a foreign official when they are outside the United States. But if they talk to an American and you're a law enforcement agency, that's interesting to you. So you use it to reverse target

them. And then you pair that with Appendix G of the Domestic Investigations Operations Guy, which says that if you have contact with anyone from outside the United States, the FBI can open a counterintelligence case up on you. So now they have all the tools they need to go after whoever they want. Because, I mean, just look at your spam box of your e-mail, your Gmail account. How much do you think came from outside the United States? I imagine there's one or two in

there. And now we have an open investigation on you counterintelligence where we don't have to respect due process, we don't have to respect your 4th Amendment rights. We don't have to even have the anticipation it's ever going to trial. So we can just circumvent all the rules and just keep digging and digging and digging. And if, you know, a decade check in and a half goes by and it's just been dry, you know what we can do? We'll just go to you and ask you questions and hope you say

something. We can say you lied, which we didn't record the interview, by the way. Just our contemporaneous recollections will document that. We think that you lacked candor with us and wouldn't you know it, let's send in the BearCat at 6:00 AM. People don't understand that this data warehouse system, which is what it's called, DWS, they didn't used to include all this stuff. I I had to clarify with George because I've never used DWS. I've never used 7O2 FISA illegally.

I never did it. It never occurred to me that that would make sense because I understood that that wasn't what the purpose of the tool was. I didn't minimize things properly because I couldn't figure out how to do that, which is a big problem in and of itself. Minimization is sort of like the redaction of Americans names. So they're not, you know, going to be cited in a case that has nothing to do with them. It has to do with a foreign

target. But we heard, we heard John Cornyn over and over and over again talking about how when we say foreign intelligence, we do mean foreign people, right. And they serve it up to DOJ. And then DOJ is like, yes, we mean foreign intelligence, no MF, uh, they mean domestic people. This is what happened as Obama was leaving. He updated 12, triple 3.

The executive order that like authorizes the collections that the National Security Agency, NSA does and NSA basically allow, they suddenly now and in 20 end of 2016 also covered by Wired magazine, also covered by the ACLU at the time they turned over this tool for deep state capabilities. They turned over something that allowed all of the NSA's collection data to sit in a warehouse that was queryable.

Now just like anybody who's ever gone to WikiLeaks if you've ever gone to any of these like these non curated databases, you have to be very specific in your search terms. But if I have what we call selectors, let's say I have Steve Friends e-mail address which they definitely have your e-mail address. Let's say they have Kyle Serafin's e-mail address. You can query this e-mail address and get every interaction that has come up

there. But the new guidance that is given by the letter that is being referenced by this Wired magazine piece which we cited on April 22nd. And there is a great little clip that I've pulled out and I put it on my Twitter page and I put it on true social. You guys can disseminate it. They say you can no longer do evidence quote evidence of a crime, only searches. That's no longer allowed. Why would you no longer allow something unless you used to do that thing in violation of

federal law? Would Would that make sense to you that the phrasing there does that line up does? Is my logic correct? Well, it's tantamount to an admission of guilt. And even in that wired piece there where they say, well, the FBI is 98% compliant with the rules and regulations that it sets for itself and monitors itself on. So we just have to take the word for it, bro. Trust me, bro. But even just take that on its face, 98% in compliance. Well, how many searches go on you?

You were doing them all the time. So isn't that admitting that 2%, one in 50 of the searches are illegal and improper? If you're doing the extrapolate that over. I don't know a million searches. Well, they've they've told us they've tightened down on the number of people that could do it. You know who can do it? SOS's, non agents, Intel analysts, non agents, people that don't have a training in constitutional law are able to do this because they believe in

intelligence. And the fundamental thing that we keep trying to hammer home with this podcast and all the interviews you and I do is that we're talking about an intelligence agency that also has law enforcement capabilities. That intelligence agency is doing something that people don't understand. They don't believe in due process because there's no requirement for due process for information, only purposes. And and we want to take to extrapolate this out.

I mean, I know people who are in the, in your chat really fired up about Jesse Kelly going in and attacking Donald Trump. He's wrong. Let's. Just put it specifically to your boy, all right? The now president of the United States has a derelict Naraduel son who committed lots of crimes as a bag man for the Biden family. We all know it. And then documented multiple felonies on a laptop which he abandoned at a laptop repair shop.

And the owner of the laptop repair shop tried to turn it in get and did turn it into the FBI. And the FBI buried it. And then the F then this laptop repair shop guy was like, hey, what the heck's going on here? I'm going to bring it to the news media. And because the intelligence apparatus of the FBI was doing an illegal FISA wiretap, they knew that that was going to

happen. And they deployed the resources to social media companies and said ignore the Hunter laptop story, ignore it, censor it. This is fake news. This is Russian disinformation. And they did. That's your boy. Who had that happen to him in 2020? He's talking about a new. Headquarters. Brand new building. You can't hold those two ideas in your head and be a rational person that this is. And I'm so sick of people saying keep your friends close and your enemies closer.

Dude, this is not an enemy that you can keep closer. This is like letting an enormous tiger and you don't have a tranquilizer dart in your house and you're like, well, I better hide in the bathroom with the damn thing. That way it'll maul me and not maul anybody else. It's going to destroy everybody, and then it's going to get out of the bathroom and kill everybody else. This is an existential threat to American liberty. And I'll add this about to Jesse Kelly's monologue.

It's about 10 minutes long. You know, think of it like a giant, like, sub sandwich. Here we were getting like the really hot sauce of it, the emotional component he laid out, item after item after item of the last few years of what the FBI has done over and over and over again and sort of the theme of your show today, the insanity. You watch that happen over and over again, and you have the cognitive dissonance to say, well, it won't happen to me, it'll be better when we're in charge.

You were in charge for four years and they did it To you. It is the Ring of Power. It was never, it was never Trump's FBI, not ever. The guy he got in charge, Chris Ray, you notice the Democrats love defending him. They go out of their way as sycophants when it comes to congressional hearings to praise his service to the country. Why would they do that if they thought he was really, you know,

acting as a as a Republican? There is no chance that guy is acting on behalf of American Civil Liberties. In fact, on his watch, we saw they deescalated rigid obedience to the Constitution to the lowest of the core values. I saw it. We know that it happened. It happened while Trump was in office, just before the election. It happened somewhere between September 3rd and September 7th of 2020, just before that

election cycle hit. Just before November, the FBI decided that rigid obedience to the Constitution was the lowest, least important value, and they move things like diversity above it. Well, diversity is our strength. That's why we have to have 9 diversity committees that are solely answerable to the Director of the FBI. They're outside the chain of command, the entire organization. Yeah, they go directly to Ray. Yeah, they go directly to Ray. They go to the office of the

director. I want to play this next piece here, which is the wildest damn thing. And we're talking about insanity, people. If you're in the chat and you're over here and you're still backing this stuff up, if you're still like, oh, the FBI, like Trump's take on FBI is OK. No, it's not. It's not OK. That doesn't mean I'm mad at the guy. I'm just saying this is a stupid take. We all have friends that we disagree with. They think things are great that

make no sense. They're like, yeah, it makes total sense to have a Corvette when you have little kids and you want to put it. You just put the car seat in the back. You're a moron. You don't put a car seat in the back of the Corvette and drive your kid around in a sports car. You also don't get an automatic transmission. I had a friend who had a a Corvette A06 with an automatic transmission. His dad bought it when I was a kid. Was like, what? No, dude, this is this is a

manual. There are. There are bad choices in the world. We can still be friends with people who make them, but we try to educate them. Like, no, you're supposed to have, you know, some control over the transmission. If you want to drive a sports car, you're supposed to not let the thing that screwed you every way from Sunday, per Chuck Schumer, They screwed you out of a presidency that was going to be affected. They were working against you

the entire time. They're working against American liberties, by the way. They're working against the political left, too. They're just doing it less, you know, less loudly. But the FBI serves the FBI. It doesn't serve some political master in any meaningful way. It serves the FB is budget, which is why they lie about things like missing and indigenous women. They're totally happy to get that money. And then they screw guys like you out there who are trying to

do your job. All right, I'm going to. I'm going to make a reference to our one of our sponsors here. And then I want to bring up this article about Gerardo Boyle. You want to talk about insanity? It happens inside the FBI, too. It's a big piece of it. All right, before we do that, yesterday was jerky day. My kid came up and dropped this off in my office. I've got big These are the monster bags, people. These are the 12 ounces of Matt hat jerky. This is the way that I order

them. This is the original spicy or the original spice flavor. I've also got the black truffle. I got a smaller bag of garlic that just showed up. I buy with my own money 'cause it's worth it. Mad Hat Jerky Matt with two TS, hat with one T Matt Hat jerky.com/kyle is how you get there. Use promo code. Kyle saves you 20%. That's a good deal. And then when you find what you like, you can set up a subscription which will also give you a 20%. You know, knock off right there.

So once you come in, you've given us credit for it. We really appreciate if you go to matthatjerky.com/kyle. If you're looking for healthy and a decent snack. I don't want to belabour this any longer. It's my favorite. This is what I I feel my rage on sitting here. Let me blow your minds folks. Here we go. We talked about Wired. This is freaking insane. If you haven't heard this, this came out yesterday. It came out in Washington Times.

It was written by Carrie Pickett, who's a friend of ours insomuch as she covers our story fairly and very few people have been willing to take these things on. It's also kind of a small news outlet. This is ground breaking insanity. FBI agent accuses top brass of Retaliation for defending whistleblower. This would fall under the Holy

Shit category. An FBI special agent has notified Congress as of Thursday that a top brass member of the FBI removed him from his job in retaliation for defending A fellow whistleblower. The agent, also an attorney who worked as an adjudicator investigating misconduct within the FBI, said his superiors turned on him when he recommended ending the suspension of FBI Agent Garrett O'boyle. I'm going to put you on the screen for your reactions as I keep going here, Steve.

Mr. O'boyle was at the center of the whistleblower saga since his clearance was revoked in September of 2022, allegedly leaking information about an investigation, a criminal investigation into Project Veritas. The suspension without pay, which he is still on, ladies and gentlemen, he's still on. The suspension was imposed with the after the FBI saw him testify. That's actually false. Kerry missed that one up.

He was suspended and then he testified at weaponization with you, Steve. You guys went on there. It financially devastated the family. We've had to go out there and raise money on their behalf. He still doesn't have an income. He's not allowed to work. The crazy thing is this. This is a brand new whistleblower, someone that none of us have met who was working

as an attorney. A third party guideline walked in, saw the investigation into a Boyle, looked at the fact that they had an evidence and said this does not substantiate a suspension. I recommend reinstatement and that guy was removed for his troubles. I'm going to show you the actual text from the article here.

The FBI adjudicator working in the security division, which we call SEC D, reviewed O'boyle's case and recommended lifting the suspension and reinstating him as an agent, the adjudicator said. The FBI lacks specific information to support the suspension of Mr. O'boyle.

According to the new Whistleblower Disclosure, Acting Section Chief Dina Perkins quickly revoked, revoked the adjudicator's finding, and then transferred him out of that post, which is kind of a cush gig at headquarters, the disclosure came claimed. This was not the first time that Perkins has moved several other employees who reported who reported to her for recommending decisions contrary to her interest, and bases many of her decisions on favouritism. What? Do you think that's that's?

Well, we've known it for a long. Time let's let's hone in on the insanity aspect of the person that that did this. Can you can you articulate that in a way and I'll maybe I'll follow up with you. Yes, I mean, I I think this you have to give me a little attitude here, all right. I you mean we all we call ourselves system idealists. OK. And and why do we say that?

Well, because we believe in the system We we have this Isaiah 68 moment here I am. I'm available for tasking Ester 414. Born for such a time as this, we are believe in a 'cause that is bigger than ourselves and we're willing to task ourselves against our own self-interest to further that cause. And as a result of that when the enemy presented itself, the hill presented itself and it was in fact our employer. We stood against it and it was

against our self-interest. But you know, I'm not to bring too much GOB and then go all Jesus on you, but like, this is not our permanent home. We have to do the right thing, even if it's against our current self-interest. It's kind of insane, but there's a faith, faith component to it. The same system, idealism and faith component exists within the system of the FBI, but it's a worldly faith.

They believe in the system of the FBI and if they adhere to it like a Pharisee and do everything, then they know that they will have to reap the worldly rewards. And it doesn't make sense to them when they look around and see you, me, or somebody else in the cubicle next door get off for something that was transient, like what? What do you mean they walked him out? Well, there must have been something more than that. I'm just going to plot along and follow, follow the system.

I'm a system idealist because I believe in the system and that's how they can delude themselves into thinking that the alligator's never going to try to eat them as it eats everyone around them first. It's called This episode is called insanity for a reason, folks. When you do the same thing over and over again, when you see it repeated over and over again, but your assumption is not for me, That's everybody else's problem there. There are human patterns of behavior.

The number of women that are beaten by men, that claim that the guy loves them and so they make excuses for them, that is a pattern. We've seen it on Indian reservations. We've seen it out in the world. You might have a friend. We are. We feel pity for that woman because what she thinks is everybody else had the same problem. But I won't get trapped in it. And she got trapped in the cycle because it's a cycle, because it's built into our human, our human desire to believe in a system.

The system may be marriage or a relationship or the FBI. In this case, what we're talking about are people look around and Steve just said it very accurately. They see someone walked out for absolute bullshit and they go, there must be something more to it. The only reason that you make excuses is because you think there must be more to it. Because I believe in the system. If you are excusing the statements of Donald Trump about building a brand new headquarters, and it has to be

in DC, you are making excuses. Despite the fact that the evidence is there should be no new FBI headquarters, our Republican GOP House failed us by pushing it forward. Same with the Senate that passed it. Everybody's on board to get a new headquarters. Nobody wants to be the person that has the next 911 on their watch. That's what they're worried

about. If you want to be real honest, the wall of 911, the spectre of 911 is still real enough that they don't want to be responsible for the next 911, right? That's, that's what. That's what they're scared of. God forbid we remove the only agency that can help us. The problem is there's already evidence in existence, which we have shared with Congress, that the FBI has nothing to do with stopping a 911, and it certainly

won't do it today. They don't even do the work that they they're making up terrorism because they can't find real terrorism, because the real terrorism is probably underground. It's probably really effective until it's when it's ready. We are. We are. Putting our trust in government employees by, at the end of the day, like they're they're people that by and large, I mean they're they're above average intelligence, but they're not, you know, really high speed, low

drag for the most part I have. A video for you? We we touched on this, you and I, offline about like the insanity of doing things that have been provably dangerous or wrong, just because it must have been different. There must have been some extending in circumstances. You know it's it's probably really dangerous to send a SWAT team at 6:00 in the morning to go get this armed subject because all of his guns that we're going to be charging him

with are inside the structure. So we should just get him when he's there. We we can't possibly think of going outside the box on that, even though we watched the raid a month ago when three agents got gunned down standing on a porch at the same type of thing. Well, different. We'll just do the same thing. It's insane. It's it's repeating things that are logical that don't make any bit of sense. I want to hammer him the story, folks. One more time. Garrett O'boyle did not do the thing.

The FBI accused him of the investigators. There's been a first whistleblower that came out and said, yeah, we we weren't able to substantiate that he did that thing, but we removed him anyway. And the statement was direct quote, we're going to fuck him over. From Deena Perkins and a guy named Sean Clark who now works for BDO. Those people, one of them still works for the Bureau. One of them has retired. Those people had a personal

vendetta. There was a personal vendetta against Garrett O'boyle, and he and I were talking about it yesterday about why. And I have a suspicion why. One of the things that I did, starting before I was removed from the Bureau in November of 21, was I gathered up a bunch of people together that we're not going to get the vaccine. You would have been part of it, but we didn't have a contact you. It was word of mouth. Only Garrett was brought into that group.

Garrett, as far as I can tell, is the only person that was in that group that I had no reasonable connection to for any other reason. The only reason that he was connected there is because he and I were in that group together. We started communicating on FBI lines. We went through what's called the link chat, which is like a Skype or an instant messenger. And we were out there communicating.

And I was helping Garrett work up his application for a surveillance group that we were going to go and apply to, to try to get ourselves out of the the nasty mess we were in, keep carrying on with our whistleblower activity that we had already started doing. But we were going to try to extract ourselves from the field office, where we'd obviously lost all the credibility with the people we worked with.

We tried to go to another unit and then we would have had visibility to all the counterterrorism cases, by the way, which would have been huge. I was applied. I had been accepted to go and do the tryout. Garrett was also accepted to do the tryout. He was allowed to do it. That was the reason they let him move, because he tried out was accepted. This team, I was removed from duty two days before I was supposed to fly out and do that, that tryout.

Or maybe it was four days before it was the week that I was supposed to go there. I had my badge and my gun taken, which was kind of incredible, actually. I hadn't booked out the ticket yet. Thankfully. I was always kind of a last minute guy on tickets. And because you never really know what's going to come up when you work as a federal agent, apparently you could lose your badge and gun.

Long and short of it is, somebody already agreed that there was no way that they could prove that Garrett did the thing they said. That person was then removed for other reasons. Then you have this adjudicator coming in another a third party with no skin in the game, a lawyer, a system idealist, someone who thinks that things are fair and we're like, holy crap, they mistreated Garrett Boyle. I better report that.

And had exactly the same thing happened to him that happened to Garrett, which is you report wrongdoing, you get destroyed at the FBI. It comes from the myth of federal exceptional service, these these like mythical Jason Bourne type attitudes that we think I had people like all over social media, Steve, that they're like, he's from the FBI. He's a trained liar. Any any training that you got that taught you to be a decent interview with the FBI?

Any because I'm going to show the video, which is hilarious. I showed it earlier. Looks like no. But before you do that, I mean, I think this is in line with what we had that another whistleblower come out about.

Paula Bate, in the aftermath of January 6th go and on a nationwide conference call to hundreds of people say if anyone had a problem with the FBI bringing for the investigations in the fashion that they were and contrasting that with their lack of any action in 2020 about the riots that were going around the country, that person needed to look for work elsewhere or to send them directly to Paula Bate and he would set them straight.

This is Deena Perkins. It's the same mindset we're going to if you disagree with the party line, we will remove you entirely from it. This is why people think because FBI employees will see this video and they'll be like, dude, look how awesome we look, folks, Hold your gag bags out because this looks like like a parody from the 80s. This is a modern new video propaganda video from the FBI

training division. I'm going to share it mostly to just entertain me and Steve, but you guys will get a kick out of it. We'll probably cut it from the audio show because there's no words to it. There's just visuals. If you guys want to jump in, it's about the hour mark in the show. You can see it. Here we go, a lamo. I like that. They showed a guy like with two by fours. Like what was that?

I was really distracted by the notion that you apparently, if you're in the FBI and you handle a firearm, you have to be bent over at roughly a 45° angle. Looks like this, folks. I got some room here. I got some room here. This is the position of the FBI. If you if you draw your gun, you immediately have to hunch because you're you're you're doing the 1950s, the 1950s hip draw routine that they had. Jelly Bean. What's his name? Jelly Bean. What was his last name?

I can't remember. It doesn't. It doesn't matter. This was the. Guy. I just imagine like the Pink Panther song as they're walking along like duh, duh, duh, duh. I mean, I when you hit play on that, I thought first it was parody because the people were running like with their arms all swinging around like they're one of those inflatables outside a car dealership where the arms are swinging and. Then was the pool open when you when you were at the Academy?

No. What was the lap swimming there like? Why were they swimming laps? They had a pool available if you wanted to get extra PT and there was no swimming component. It was closed when I was there, it was closed. Significant portions ever were closed. And then they had they lined up the one woman who's about what, 4 foot eight, 105 lbs With the Remington 870. And then they clearly cut away because they did not want her sending around on camera. Yeah, just letting that thing fly.

Everything about that is is insane. That whole video that they're doing that the cool, like I never got on. Did you ever get on that frame with the Suburban? Did you ever get on one of those frames for the vehicle? No, they they didn't let us use. Yeah, they didn't use those that. Was not like sedan. Did you ever get headgear on and

go boxing with with gloves? We did do boxing but we didn't do the bull in the ring 'cause that was deemed to be too violent, where you, you know, you stand in the middle and there the whole class are. Supposed to fight five people for like? 5 minutes. Keep sending bodies at you. Yeah. I did think that the most accurate part of that video though were was when they were looking at tactical scenarios on

a computer screen. Because they don't actually do the tactical scenarios, they just sit at a computer screen that that's probably the most accurate reflection you can get. I thought the most accurate was them eating the sandwiches. They were really excited about those foods. And you know, laugh laughing it up with your roommate in in your. Room. Yeah. Yucking it up. Why not? That's accurate.

All, all of all of this is to say that we have this myth that people have established they think the FBI is capable. They think it is one thing, it is in fact the other. We've just showed you that seven O2, FISA is unmitigated capabilities to data mine, digital information that touches US, wires coming directly from the NS as search capabilities. That's what the FBI is about. That's the high priority. In the meantime, they're going to tell you like what about

missing Indian women? Steve just debunked it for you. I'm telling you, my experience is the same. You go out there and try and find where these people, they're not there because they just moved off. They were successful and they left the government reservation, which is to say they got a job and they became Americans like the rest of us. So the saddest thing in the world is, is that there's this myth of competency. There's this myth of what it actually is doing.

You've got people like Donald Trump saying that it's going to go after violent crime in DC. In reality, it's making stupid videos that look like it came from the 80s, even though they probably just made that last year with garbage, you know, parody style, corporate imagery and and and a bunch of nonsensical music like unlicensable music. And it's not doing the thing you think. It's people that are serving their own interests. And when people who work inside the Bureau see that they're

like, well, my job is good. The thing that I'm doing is valuable, which is why they're so surprised. Every single time they bring up, like the first moment that they have that question, they get thrown out. Now. By the way, guys like you and me used to be working in the FBI. We would get removed from our job for what we did, and we get put in some broom closet somewhere. They put us on some squad they

didn't care about. They'd send you to an Indian Reservation, and then you would just be able to work Indian crimes until you retire. They would ruin your career trajectory. You wouldn't be a supervisor because you weren't a believer. But they didn't take your money and your job and your family and your pension. They didn't destroy that. That didn't used to happen. That's new. That's new since 2020. That's new. Since the Obama policies and capabilities came in and they started pushing.

This is all like Mueller and comedy's sort of legacy within the Bureau. It's a new game. That's why we had guys like Kryder on the other day. He got to finish out his career. Yes. And you know, he was ATF, but I talked to John Dodson, he's like, look, they just in my time they weren't good enough at targeting the whistleblowers and removing them. That's it was just the timing that I lucked out on. And he finished his race last year. He retired from the ATF and Kryder did the same thing.

The, the the problem is that these people will sit there and watch this happen and think it's never going to happen to me because they're bought in to the idea that the FBI is what's projected or they're hoping to project from that video that look, it's they're they're they're doing the good work of the American people. And I I I'm better off serving on the inside, even if there's problems all around me.

I mean, we, we talked about yesterday with this Garrett story, like that guy came forward now, but you know, unless he recently looked at Garrett's file, but where's he been at the last 20 months? That's right. And he stepped forward. And I think that they're, they're sitting there in the offices and they're watching and they're afraid. And my moles are telling me from various offices I've talked to, nobody's even doing any work. There's an operational problem now at the FBI.

Nobody wants to do anything in these smaller offices, these smaller resident agencies, because they don't want to have the spotlight for one of them in any way, shape or form. Just keep your head down and ride your time out. So even the talk about the good work the FBI does, they're not doing it. They're not. It's not worth the risk. It's better to just punch the clock, make sure you're in your desk at 8 by 8:15, and don't

leave before 4:45. Yeah, just shut your mouth and color and try to ride it out to your pension. There are plenty of people who have have proven that that's a successful tactic. My former supervisor, when I was on my surveillance team, who likes to criticize me on social media now, it's very funny. He suddenly has all these big, big, brave balls. But didn't ever, while he was working for the Bureau, did exactly that. I I talked to him and he was like, yeah, I'm not getting the

shot. I'm just going to hide my office. I'm going to hope nobody notices me until I can retire. That's called cowardice. We have an agent, an agent problem that is a bunch of people who are cowards. The the key is when you put your hand up and you do that oath, you're supposed to say, I'm willing to lose this job for the right reason. I want to see that from the president. I want to see that from our our director. I want to see it from the attorney General.

I want to see it from members of Congress who say there are principles that I will not break. And if that means I lose this job, so be it. You don't get to buy your your integrity back. All these people have frittered away integrity and they have gone with what Rob Green said on our show the other day. They have chosen institution over constitution because they have no constitution of their own. They haven't internalized that and said freedom is the thing

that we're here for. If it cost me my comfort, so be it. We have a country that is addicted to being lazy and weak and we continue to see that be the case. Like you said, that guy who is the whistleblower, good on him for coming forward. Most likely thought things are going to work out in my favor. I'm going to call out what happened to Garrett. Oh shoot, it happened to me. Now I'm going to have to work through the administrative remedies.

Administrative remedies have never worked inside the Bureau. They they just, they exist to protect management. That's why we're going to have Kurt Sousdak come on next week and play some of the stuff and talk about it just how rotten it is, because he's got a really, really interesting seat to the to the visibility and what's going on in this building. It would be an interesting, I mean experiment.

You'd never be able to do it cuz it's just not possible but to just be inside his head or have a blood pressure monitor on him and you and me. At the moment when they walked and they tried to walk us out, I was really calm cuz I knew I did the right thing. And look, I don't. I have no guarantees that I'm going to retire as an FBI agent. I'm going to do the right thing. I bet he was through the roof, like freaking out. Like, what do you mean?

This is completely a mystery wrapped in an enigma. I have no understanding of how this possibly could have happened. I believed in the system, and the system let me down. I recognized and you recognized and Garrett recognized that the system that we were working for was jacked up and they were the the force that we had to stand

in the gap against. And if that meant we couldn't retire and have our shadow box like Mr., John Nance, your former supervisor who guaranteed has a shadow box and I love me some me wall that he types away after 10 hours a day, he's. Got a picture of himself with the? Home. He's got a picture of himself with Eric Holder. Honestly, there you go. Yeah. And that that was a problem.

And that's why we keep project tried to bring information forward to the people that we hoped would be able to resolve and reform those issues. I mean maybe our our hopes were misplaced in that regard. I mean I sent over the the article to the weaponization committee and they were surprised to get it. So I don't know. Yeah, They're not paying attention.

They're they're let me, let me tell you about the moment that they decided to walk me out, because that just brought back a memory to me. And it's it's poignant for exactly what you said. I don't think we've ever have. We talked about this before, that moment. You told me about the badge being in the cork board, but. Yeah, no. OK, so, so, but I didn't tell you I had my special agent in charge. His name's Raoul bit Honda. I think he's still there.

I don't think he's retired yet. He walked into my former boss's office. I was in my former boss's office, a guy who told me you've been transferred from my squad and good riddance. I'm glad you're gone. And I was there not because we were friendlies, but because we had a mutual buddy. We had a friend in common whose wife had just committed suicide. And I wanted him to know that. So I, you know, kind of basically I I did the uncomfortable I I bridged that gap that had already been

burned. And I went in there and said, look, it's this is more important than whatever's going on between you and me. We have a friend, he just lost someone, a woman that you know and then I know and I wanted you to be aware of it in case you reached out because we weren't like real close friends, but we were friends enough and we had that mutual partner. So we go in there and we had

that conversation. While I'm having that conversation, he thanks me for letting him know because like you would Raul Bahanda and his second command who was I think his name is Ed Brown. Ed Brown Junior of my recollection serve. He was our ASAC. They had driven from Albuquerque without telling us. 3 1/2 hours. Drove all the way down to get rid of me. I bet you they were getting really hyped up in the in the van or the in the Suburban as they drove down.

Probably listen to that music from the video that you just. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Getting like ready for FBI training time. They come in. Seraphin, we need you in the conference room. OK, fine. So I go there. I know what's happening. Just like you knew what's happening. I'm like, well, here we go. Thought I was going to ride this one out. Not going to happen. Oh, well, so be it.

When we get there, he starts handing paperwork over to me that says I'm going to be suspended, that I'm being removed, that I was unprofessional with the police officer. He tries to read it to me. Not very well, by the way. He's not a very good orator. And I said I can read. Thank you. I'll read it myself. Take it, read it. I take my time. It's documents that I'm supposed to sign, acknowledging whatever. I'll take my time reading the stuff. So I did reading, reading,

reading. We do our thing. He asked for the badge, He asked for the gun. We go through that whole thing on the way out the door as he's handing that stuff over and he's giving me my final packet. His hands are shaking, like, visibly shaking. You know, you pick that kind of stuff up. When you're used to interviewing people, you kind of want to know, like, is this person about to have it? They had a massive adrenaline dump and he reaches out to shake

my hand, which is really odd. But like, instinctively I did it anyway and I gave him a firm grip. He had ice cold hands, right? That is a sympathetic, nervous response that you dump all the blood away from these kind of things away from your from your small right to the core right to your major muscle groups that you can fight or flight and run. I see cold hands shaking like a leaf because that was probably one of the scariest things that he had to do was walk Kyle's

Seraphin out the door. What a fucking coward. Sorry, like I I can't even hold that back. It's so it's so amazing to me that these clown show human beings are the ones. And then that's why we get pissed off when people want to defend this agency like it's going to do something. It's made of sycophants and people that worship institution over Constitution and do not have any idea what the right thing to do is.

And they think they're doing the right thing right up until the alligator eats them and then they're shocked by it. Which is why the people that go to Kurt Susdak constantly don't understand what's happening. They're all against Steve Friend and Kyle Serif and Gerardo Boyle right up until it happens to them. And they're like, whoa, what happened to us? What happened to the lifeboat with you? It happened to everybody.

We had people reach out and say, hey, maybe you might need to do a fundraiser for me. No, screw you. You didn't do the right thing until it came down on your head. We did it up front knowing what the cost was going to be. That's what suspendable is. That's what being suspendable is, folks. That's what we always talk about. That's why we talk about it. And that's why the story of the ordinary men is such a big deal to us, because these people are ordinary men.

That doesn't make them bad people. It makes them like everybody. They haven't drawn a line in the sand and they're willing to be compromised. That's why I love the people that listen to the show, that that, that get what we're about. That's why we encourage people to do it. That's why we wear the merch. It's not about the merch, it's about the idea. It reminds you, go ahead, take some final thoughts here and then we'll promote the merch store too.

Look, I I I was relieved to hear this story come out from Garrett. I'm going to make sure that I give his thoughts on the American Radicals podcast. We're going to be covering down on that tomorrow on Saturday at noon, rumble.com/am Red Pod. And I think what we've touched on today is there's just a stark contrast between what our expectations were coming in. I mean, and I remember, as clear as you remember being walked out, I remember being walked out. I remember being walked in.

I mean I remember the day that I got to take my oath and feeling genuinely fortunate and lucky that I got the opportunity to do that and and look I'm not realistic like I'm I'm not a tip of the spear infantryman going into Baghdad that I'm expecting to maybe take on some some frag like I. But I know that that's a possibility. And I I said, hey, I'm available for tasking to do that.

And unfortunately, too many people just saw it as an opportunity to get a really sweet government paycheck and all the pensions and all the accoutrements attached to it. And as long as you are a system idealist for that system, and none of us were about that system, we're about being available for a larger system, the only system that matters. That's it. That's what it's about, folks.

You want to support our buddy Garrett, who has been not just vindicated again and again and again, but continues to be vindicated. And by the way, there's more common folks. We're not done with this story yet and it's all going to make sense pretty soon. I think. Hopefully, hopefully we can tell the story on a bigger platform than this one. You guys can support the merch store. It's the Dash suspendables.com. The Dash suspendables.com.

What shirt am I wearing today? I'm wearing the TKSS shirt. That's the Kyle Serafin show shirt. If you guys want to support that. It's got our suspendables badge on it. That is where the loyalty for this team lies. It lies in doing the right thing for the right reason. Promo code Kyle Kyle. Promo code Kyle saves you 10%. None of the monies from that from that merch store go to the show. They all go to our buddy. That's what we do. The Dash suspendables.com promo

code. Kyle, you guys can use it to save a little bit of money and also let people know as you walk out in the world that you want to be suspendable. Steve, are we had more stuff? I'm not going to cover it all. I have a drag queen video. I'll do it on Monday. It's all good. Do you want a palate cleanser for the weekend? Send it, I need it. You got little kids. I got little kids. We've been going through a guy named Tyler Champagnes Toddler

motivational podcast. So folks, if you are behind and this is the first show you've caught in a while, you got to go back to the beginning of the week. We did it on Monday, We did it on Tuesday, We did it on Thursday. It's Jocko Willock Style Black and White Motivational podcast This is Toddler Motivational Podcast #4 with Tyler Champagne. You can find him on Instagram. Here we go. Drop your nap. Raise your parents blood pressure. Learn 200 words. Use zero of them.

Do not wash your hands, ever, unless it's in a dirty puddle or a disease filled birdbath. Next time you're supposed to be napping, calculate your chaos potential instead. Chaos potential is the amount of sleep you get multiplied by the chaotic energy you have in your friend's circle. You associate yourself with respectful, well behaved, nonviolent toddlers. You have a low chaos potential. Associate yourself with the girl who sings Jingle Bells well into

the summer. Associate yourself with the boy who tries to put an entire doorknob in his mouth. That friends circle those associates. High chaos potential. If you are going to sleep, do it. Face down. Never let your parents get comfortable. People give up when they're at their lowest moment. Make sure your parents get to theirs. Get obsessed with bubbles. While you're watching the bubbles float away, your mom is watching her sanity float away.

If a flower doesn't bloom, do you blame the flower or the environment? Screw the flower, stomp on it, put it in your mouth. Throw it at your baby sister. That is how you do it. I'm pretty sure my son has been listening to these podcasts without telling me and he is doing all those things. I see that there's a gap here we need to fill. We need to have a David David Goggins version of the toddler podcast. We got to find somebody to do that for us.

Just. Stare at their shoes and not put them on, but they're on the wrong feet. Scream at them about how their failures at life. It's all good. All right, folks. We hope you have a good weekend. Check out tomorrow the American Radicals. What you guys are covering down on all the FBI failures. You guys have done a little retrospective. Is that? Yeah, I mean, I went all the way back to April of this year and got some FBI failures, I think 12 headlines.

It took you 40 days to go back and find like an entire shows where the. Failures all within Garrett's fasting period. That's that's really what I. Fantastic. All right, guys, follow Steve Friend. You can follow him at Real Steve Friend on X. You can follow him at Real under score Steve Friend on True Social and the American Radicals podcast. If you're not following that, it's Amrad Pod. rumble.com/amrad Pod. I salute you, friend. I will see you.

I'll see you next week. For this we'll talk over the weekend, I'm sure. All right, be blessed. OK, Steve, Friends signing off. Ladies and gentlemen, we appreciate all of you. I hope you guys enjoyed the palate cleanser. Let me put a long five star review on. I hope you guys do not mind because this one is a little bit intense, but we're going to get into it. Here it goes. This is from NC to Cali, coming from earlier last month. No time for the comforting lies. Five stars.

I have been a steadfast viewer of the Kyre Serpent show from the beginning. There's truly nothing like it. Kyle brings a unique perspective from his life experiences which you won't find anywhere else. I've been a dedicated consumer of Dan Bongino's podcast since 2017 and it was through Dan's podcast that I first discovered Kyle Serafin. I catch it live on Rumble more often than not, but I do miss

the live and can only listen. Caught up here on Apple Podcast Every episode Kyle is perfecting his craft and making an excellent show and it just keeps getting better. This is a really long self-serving one folks. I'm just going to keep going with it 'cause I love it. Kyle is a former FBI Special Agent. He was unjustly fired after coming forward as a whistleblower. He's a true patriot who fearlessly exposes the hidden truth. We try, even if it doesn't make you happy.

All he brings eye opening insight into the tactics of the jackbooted thugs harassing you that doesn't that doesn't tell the line across America. And he is his ex girlfriend's loudest critic. As an ardent to a advocate and activist, I appreciate his unwavering defense, the constitutional right to keep and bear arms. It's truly inspirational stance against Marxist Jack wagons trying to trample on the right to self-defense. As an added bonus, the references to 90s action movies

brings joy to my heart. Point Break is one of the best movies of all time if you know, you know. Thank you Kyle and the other suspendables, there it is Steve and Garrett for bringing the truth to the sunlight. It's where the lies are sanitized. The liberals in America hate this country and are committed to the destruction of everything we stand for. We need brave patriots like the suspendables to fight back

against tyranny. God bless him for always bringing the fight and the fire saturated. In truth, be prepared to be red pill. That is a hell of a review folks. If you want to leave a hell of a review like that, you can guarantee you will find yourself on the Kyle Seraphin Show being read at one of the end. Please leave them. They don't have to be that long, but we do really appreciate your

thoughts. That is a pretty good encompassing of what we're all about here, and it covers down exactly on how to avoid the insanity of doing the same thing over and over again. Be suspendable. Be aware that you may be asked in your life whatever that looks like to do the right thing, and there will be a cost associated with it. Be prepared to bear that cost and do so gladly knowing that you joined good company.

This is not self-serving, this is serving your kids, this is serving your country and this is serving the future, which is what Western values are about. This is doing the right thing for the right reason, in the right way at the moment that you least expect to be asked to do it. I thought I was out of the fire when that guy came to the door and told me to get into the conference room and leave.

So be it. Your moment will come when you are not expecting it, but you better be prepared for it and it is coming for all of us. This is a wild year. We're asking our politicians to be better. We can only do that if we know what they're doing, that they're doing wrong, that we have good information we're trying to

disseminate. Do me a favor, share episodes like this that breakdown the reality of the truth on the ground so that people can go out and be armed in their disagreements with their friends. Disagreements. Not fights or arguments. Just disagree with them politely and give them information and refer them back here anyway. That's your ammo. That is your that is your charge for the weekend. I hope all of you have a wonderful weekend. Disconnect if you can. Don't spend your time obsessing

about the news. It will always be there. We'll get back to it on Monday morning Until that point. God bless all of you. I mean that. I hope God blesses all of them. Hope they bless that God bless our family and continues to. And we will see you again after the weekend in the morning on Monday. Thanks for listening to the Kyle Seraphin Show streamed live weekdays on rubble.com/kyle Seraphin. Follow Kyle on Twitter, Truth, Social and Instagram at Kyle Seraphin.

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